Granite and not much else.
HFF everyone!
HANWE Everyone! Lane near St Day. ... And a tree t…
St Agnes Head, dusk
Old parish church and cemetary, St Day
foggy Jarama Valley
It's a small world!
An old corner of St Day
HFF everyone!
Teleférico. HANWE everybody!
My old friend, the Guardian of the Mountains
The Star Inn at Vogue - sunset
The Old Dairy, Saint Day at dusk
Camellia bush and mackerel sky
Yellow (van), white (wall), blue (sky) and green (…
HFF everyone!
Camellia frenzy! HFF no. 2 today!
HANWE Everyone! Lane near St Day.
Near Sally's Bottom
A horse field, Saint Day. (Probably good field mus…
Couldn't resist another camellia shot.
Another from my path of the moment
Killifreth mine
Les Rochers, Pont Romain, St. Léger-du-Ventoux
The fields of St Day
Truro Cathedral. HANWE everyone!
Carnon Viaduct. HFF Everyone!
First snow of this winter
Today's enjoyable walk in the snow
Former parish church, St Day
For Isabel / Xata
St Agnes Head and Man and his Man ...
HANWE, everybody! Does granite have a heart? Obvio…
HFF everyone!
La Sierra de La Cabrera from the other side (see p…
La Sierra de La Cabrera - granite extravaganza!
winter garden
Crane Island, North Cliffs, Cornwall
HANWE, everybody. Tenacious ivy
First camellias of the year. HFF everyone!
San Lorenzo de El Escorial
Saint Day, town centre at night
Redruth buttermarket
Granite playground
HANWE & Happy New Year everyone (but with fewer of…
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Another (snowy) corner of my Mum's garden


That wall is about 50 years older than the house and extends from the street at the front right to the back of the garden and beyond. So it would have been built around 1780 and the indications from a very old and badly defined map I found in the library some years ago showed that it probably enclosed a large tin mine of which further records are non-existant. A survey report did reveal adits below the house but as the closest one to the surface is 50 feet down and the rock is granite there is no possibility of land slip, even if St Day is known as 'Sinking City' (as fields and occasionaly houses have disappeared into sudden and unknown - or perhaps more usually - unrecorded mine shafts opening up especially in very wet weather and of which the mine caps were not durable enough, especially over the course of centuries!).
Leo W, Erhard Bernstein, Fred Fouarge, Heide and 36 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Bonne journée. Amitiés
Bonne et agréable journée.
Admired in: www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
An interesting narrative as well............
Andy Rodker club has replied to Helena FerreiraI like this picture very much!
A big contrast from sunny Spain!!
Best Wishes, HWW,, and stay safe!!
Peter
Andy Rodker club has replied to Peter_Private_Box clubYou seem to have a thing about 'Sunny Spain' all year round! It just ain't so! I refer you kindly to look at my reply to Rosa in the comments to my next photo upload!
Best wishes,
Andy
Have a lovely weekend and keep warm! Has the snow gone yet?
Andy Rodker club has replied to Ecobird clubPurely by serendipity, there has been no loss of life in the area, at least in living memory, due to the opening up of uncharted mine shafts. Quite amazing really (the odd cow has disappeared though!)
Well taken.
All the best, Andy
Andy Rodker club has replied to Heide clubSign-in to write a comment.